Toronto Star

World Cup probe: U.S. hopes Qatar will co-operate

- ROB HARRIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON— The United States hopes Qatar will co-operate with the World Cup bidding investigat­ion, Attorney General Loretta Lynch said on Wednesday, insisting that the Gulf nation being a key ally in the fight against Islamic State militants was irrelevant in any considerat­ions about pursuing a corruption case.

The U.S. is working closely on the FIFA investigat­ion with Swiss authoritie­s, whose case started by probing the dual votes for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups five years ago.

Qatar’s 2022 bid, rather than Russia’s successful 2018 campaign, has been subject to the heaviest scrutiny amid waves of bribery allegation­s, as yet unproven.

“We will follow the facts and the evidence where it leads us,” Lynch said at a briefing in London. “And regardless of who is handling that investigat­ion, whether it’s us or the Swiss, I think that Qatar’s role in it would hopefully be co-operative.”

Qatar’s vast al-Udeid airbase outside the capital, Doha, serves as the forward headquarte­rs for U.S. Central Command, and hosts dozens of aircraft participat­ing in the U.S.-led campaign targeting the Islamic State group in Syria and Iraq.

The importance of the military installati­on to the U.S. was highlighte­d by first lady Michelle Obama visiting last month, but Lynch said diplomatic and military relations with Qatar are not a factor in deciding whether to act on any evidence of corruption in the World Cup vote.

“I think that we make our considerat­ions based on the considerat­ions of the case, based on the evidence, based on the facts and based on what’s appropriat­e to handle if we were to discover a problem or corruption or a violation of law that led to a U.S. case,” Lynch said. “We would move on that basis.”

Lynch has spearheade­d the U.S. Department of Justice investigat­ion into soccer corruption, which erupted in public in May when 14 people were indicted including FIFA executives. A further 16 men were charged last week over bribes and kickbacks, with two FIFA vice-presidents arrested while in Zurich for an executive committee meeting.

The U.S. expressed disappoint­ment that one of those vice-presidents — CONMEBOL president Juan Angel Napout — “sought to portray himself as an agent of reform” at FIFA while allegedly profiting from corruption.

“It is incumbent upon FIFA to ensure they have the appropriat­e screening processes, and that they have enough of a view of the specific methodolog­ies that they need to adopt, that regardless of where they come from, there are methodolog­ies and compliance mechanisms that will make the organizati­on stronger,” Lynch said at the internatio­nal affairs think tank Chatham House where she delivered a speech on the global fight against terrorism.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada